When it's necessary to execute invalidate() on a View?

后端 未结 4 1880
予麋鹿
予麋鹿 2020-12-02 12:15

My answer to this question was just accepted but I started to wonder when exactly one needs to invalidate() a View and when it is not necessary?

After a bit of think

相关标签:
4条回答
  • 2020-12-02 12:45

    Usually, the system handles resizing, hiding, showing and a ton of other things for your widgets automatically but it sometimes has issues if the underlying buffer for drawn pixels or backing data has changed or is stale (you swap the image resource on a View or the raw dataset changes). This occurs because there is no way that the OS can know that the data changed in the specific manner that it did.

    In these cases where you are dealing with drawing, you have to tell the system that its underlying data is not in a good state with Widget.invalidate() and the re-drawing gets queued on the main thread just as you mentioned. Depending on the system implementation and Android version what is tracked for changes by the system varies but what I normally do is assume that system resources (byte arrays, char arrays, resource indexes, manual drawing on the context) are not tracked and need an invalidate and everything else will be handled by the system.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-02 12:53

    I had this problem when I wanted to draw a textPaint! My code was

        canvas.drawPaint(textPaintNumber)
        canvas.drawText("MyText", 30F, 63F, textPaintNumber)
    

    I cleared the first lint and the problem was solved

        canvas.drawText("MyText", 30F, 63F, textPaintNumber)
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-02 12:56

    Please remember that drawing on the screen is frequent process, whenever you update a view, that change should be propogated and redrawn to notify such change right. invalidate() is a trigger method,that signals force reDrawing of any view you wish to show changes for.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-12-02 13:00

    (Do consider accepting some answers)

    Generally, invalidate() means 'redraw on screen' and results to a call of the view's onDraw() method. So if something changes and it needs to be reflected on screen, you need to call invalidate(). However, for built-in widgets you rarely, if ever, need to call it yourself. When you change the state of a widget, internal code will call invalidate() as necessary and your change will be reflected on screen. For example, if you call TextView.setText(), after doing a lot of internal processing (will the text fit on screen, does it need to be ellipsised, etc.), TextView will call invalidate() before setText() returns. Similarly for other widgets.

    If you implement a custom view, you will need to call invalidate() whenever the backing model changes and you need to redraw your view. It can also be used to create simple animations, where you change state, then call invalidate(), change state again, etc.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题